Detroit Christmas Bomber Interrogated For Less Than One Hour; Gibbs Defends Administration's Actions

Yesterday on FOX News Sunday White House Spokesman Robert Gibbs defended the Administration’s decision to grant Christmas undie-bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab the right to remain silent and provide him with a court-appointed lawyer. Abdulmutallab was interrogated for only 50 minutes before he was appointed a lawyer.The Washington Examiner reported:

On “Fox News Sunday,” host Chris Wallace asked White House spokesman Robert Gibbs whether President Obama was informed of the decision to read Abdulmutallab his Miranda rights before or after it was done. Gibbs avoided the question, saying, “That decision was made by the Justice Department and the FBI, with experienced FBI interrogators.” Gibbs stressed that “Abdulmutallab was interrogated and valuable intelligence was gotten as a result of that interrogation.”

Wallace pressed. “But we now find out he was interrogated for 50 minutes,” he said to Gibbs. “When they came back, he was read his Miranda rights and he clammed up.”

“No,” Gibbs answered. “Again, he was interrogated. Valuable intelligence was gotten based on those interrogations. And I think the Department of Justice and the — made the right decision, as did those FBI agents.”

“Let me just press one last question,” Wallace said. “You really don’t think that if you’d interrogated him longer that you might have gotten more information, since we now know that Al Qaeda in Yemen — “

“Well, FBI interrogators believe they got valuable intelligence and were able to get all that they could out of him,” Gibbs said.

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